Police Mum on Fatal Shooting of Mexican National, Mexican Government Condemns Third Shooting in Less than Month
Witnesses say Ernesto Canepa was unarmed when he was shot by police in Santa Ana, Calif., media reports suggest he was a robbery suspect.


Last Friday Ernesto Canepa became at least the third Mexican national to be shot by police in the U.S. under questionable circumstances in the last month, prompting the Mexican government to call for an investigation of the shooting and call for reforms of use-of-force policies by police in the U.S.
Witnesses say Canepa wasn't armed when he was fatally shot by cops. According to media reports may have been a robbery suspect but police in Santa Ana, California, haven't released any information on the incident, not even a name. The incident led to a protest by family and activists in the area during a city council meeting for police chaplain awards this week.
As for Mexico's complaints, while any attention to questionable police shootings is helpful—Ferguson's police department came under needed federal scrutiny only after protests over a questionable police shooting that the feds nevertheless decided, likely rightly, didn't amount to a civil rights violation—the Mexican government might do better to lead by example.
Mexico has seen a 600 percent rise in reported incidents of torture and other brutality by Mexican police, a small fraction of total cases, as noted by Amnesty International. Understandably, Canepa's sister said she thought it was a good idea the Mexican government was drawing attention to the killing of her brother. She's also glad she's in the U.S. "We're here because things aren't right in Mexico," she told the Orange County Register.
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In a somewhat-related item regarding the lack of transparency and accountability within the justice system - Most Americans thought the laws of perjury and obstruction of justice already applied to prosecutors and are shocked to find out that they rarely suffer any consequence?not even termination?when failing to abide by them. Americans should be shocked. Prosecutors have been given a pass for way too long, and as a result, their conduct has become increasingly egregious.
Crap, can't tell from the preview if the link is going to, you know, link like it's supposed to.
Yeah it works. Got me all riled up, even though only the most recent case is news to me. But not surprising. Like I always say, authority without accountability leads to corruption.
Your link worked for me.
The unpunished crimes mentioned in that article are disgusting (as is the murder mentioned in the Reason article above).
Time to break out one of my all-time favorite Supreme Court quotes:
It serves the public interest when prosecutors may run roughshod over Defendants and their illusory "rights." Always good to know.
Qualified immunity should be replaced with strict liability.
Isn't it ironic, don't ya think?
Officer Safety is paramount! Mexicans cops just want to go home after a shift patrolling their sector of the homefront! USA! USA! I mean, Mex-i-co! Mex-i-co!
Wow, but Ernesto looks like such a friendly guy?
He does look like an extra from "Better Call Saul".
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If the Mexican Government does not want its Nationals shot in the United States, it should ensure that they stay south of the Border where it can protect them.
LOL - if the Mexican government cared about murder, they'd legalize drugs. "By the end of 2013, the estimated number of killed in the Mexican drug warfare was topping 111,000 people." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M.....Casualties
Seems to me, Mexican politicians want to change the subject from something other than the list of murders each day on their media headlines.